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Rugby

Finn Russell helps hosts go top

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Gallagher Premiership
Bath (8) 25
Tries: Cokanasiga 2, Stooke, Reid Con: Russell Pen: Russell
Harlequins (5) 17
Tries: Smith, Walker, Chisholm Con: Smith

Scotland stand-off Finn Russell edged out England counterpart Marcus Smith as Bath went top of the Premiership with a bonus-point win over Harlequins.

Home winger Joe Cokanasiga scored two tries, the first of them after barely a minute, quickly levelled by Smith.

But Russell’s penalty edged Bath ahead at the break, aided by a man advantage from Danny Care’s yellow card.

Elliott Stooke, Cokanasiga and Miles Reid then added second-half scores to secure Bath their key fourth try.

That try bonus point in the swirling wind and rain at the Rec edged them above Sale to be top of the table at Christmas.

Jack Walker and James Chisholm scored second-half tries for Quins, but Smith hit the post with a last-minute conversion attempt that would have earned the visitors a losing bonus point.

Bath took the lead when Will Muir leapt high to tap back Ben Spencer’s lofted kick, Russell somehow found space on the right to release Ollie Lawrence and Cokanasiga was on his shoulder to steam through Tyrone Green’s attempted tackle.

After Russell’s conversion attempt went wide, Smith then danced through the home defence to score at the other end, although he hooked his kick against a post.

Max Ojomoh then went over on the left seven minutes before the break but referee Luke Pearce disallowed the try, bringing play back and yellow-carding Care for falling on the tackled player and awarding a penalty which Russell kicked.

Bath made their man advantage count at the start of the second half with a catch-and-drive try by lock forward Stooke.

It went unconverted but, despite Care’s return to the field, the hosts moved 20-5 ahead when Cokanasiga steamrollered over Smith’s attempted tackle. allowing Russell to land his first conversion of the game.

Smith’s penalty to the corner led to a catch-and-drive try for Bath old boy Walker, Smith converting to make it 20-12.

But Bath regained the upper hand and, after his attempted drop-goal hit the post, Russell’s inch-perfect tactical kick then set up a line-out in the corner, from which Reid’s try stretched his side’s lead to 25-12 with six minutes left.

Chisholm’s last-minute score came too late to count, when Smith again hooked his conversion attempt against the post to leave Quins sixth in the table, six points behind new leaders Bath.

Who’s next?

Bath have eight days before their next game, at Leicester on New Year’s Eve.

Harlequins host Gloucester at Twickenham next Saturday before facing bottom club Newcastle away on Friday 5 January.

Bath fly-half Finn Russell gets a pass way under pressure from Quins flanker James Chisholm
Bath and Scotland stand-off Finn Russell and Quins flanker James Chisholm were both on the scoresheet

Bath head of rugby Johann van Graan:

“It makes Christmas a lot more enjoyable, but the most important thing is that the people of Bath are smiling and I’d like to think we gave them a good performance.

“It was like two heavyweight boxers, each punching back. That’s what makes the Premiership really special. There are so many good teams and games are so close.

“Joe Cokanasiga was very disappointed not to go to the World Cup. But there has been some very good communication from Steve Borthwick and the England team about what he needs to work on.

“Aerially he has improved so much. I keep saying to him that he’s the biggest winger I’ve ever coached – and I’ve been fortunate to coach some good and very fast wingers. His size is something he can use so much. And he used it. Those finishes… the one down in the left corner, he literally ran over three guys and still had the power to finish.”

Harlequins director of rugby Billy Millard:

“The kicking game, the aerial battle in that weather, was always going to be a big part of it and they did it very well. Because of that, we had to work really hard.

“It’s definitely a long stretch, but there are no excuses. We had a good week, we freshened up and, as I said, it was just execution stuff around that aerial battle in the conditions.

“We then started taking some high balls and we did get back into the game. But they did some amazing 50:22s that fell their way.

“When we had those big wins against Sale and Racing we didn’t get too high. And when you drop a game you can’t get too low. There were definitely some learnings there. The next fortnight is going to be important in keeping our position among the leading contenders.”

Bath: Gallagher; Cokanasiga, Lawrence, Ojomoh, Muir; Russell, Spencer; Obano, Annett, du Toit, Stooke, Ewels, van Velze, Reid, Barbeary.

Replacements: Dunn, Schoeman, Stuart, Roux, Coetzee, Schreuder, Bailey, Redpath.

Harlequins: T Green; David, Joseph, Esterhuizen, Lynagh; Smith, Care; Marler, Walker, Collier, Launchbury, Lewies, Cunningham-South, Chisholm, Dombrandt.

Replacements: Riley, Baxter, Lewis, Herbst, Hammond, W Evans, Porter, Beard.

Sin-bin: Care (33)

Referee: Luke Pearce.

— Reports /TrainViral

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Rugby

England challenge is to start beating the best

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An international season that started on 5 August in Cardiff ended for England on Saturday in Auckland with a feeling of deja vu in the air.

Just like in Dunedin a week earlier, England had stayed in the fight admirably in the first half, rallying either side of the break to take control and threaten to pull off a historic win, before frustratingly fading in the final quarter as the All Blacks bench proved decisive.

So how should England supporters view the 2-0 series defeat? A tour that showed Steve Borthwick’s side are moving in the right direction? Or a huge missed opportunity?

“Absolutely both,” said skipper Jamie George, who led the group with distinction on his first tour as captain.

England have played South Africa, Ireland and France over the past eight months, in addition to two games against New Zealand. The aggregate score against these top four sides in the world is 101-111, with one narrow win and four narrow defeats.

“We are definitely trending in the right direction,” vice-captain Henry Slade said.

“We are pushing the top four sides now and getting better and better week by week.”

The challenge for England now is to get on the right side of these tussles.

“I don’t want to revisit mistakes,” reflected Borthwick on Sunday in downtown Auckland, shortly before starting the long journey home via Sydney and Singapore.

“In each of those games, we’ve been in a position late in the game in a leading position on the scoreboard.”

‘I need to coach them fast’

There are some key areas where England need to improve if they are to become a genuine force on the world stage.

Keeping the scoreboard moving when matches tighten up – England scored only three second-half points in Auckland and five in Dunedin – as well as shoring up the scrum and being more streetwise are all areas highlighted by Borthwick.

“Test matches at this level are tight encounters, they are decided generally by a penalty or a drop-goal, one moment, one missed kick,” he said.

“That is the nature of it and the players have experienced that, we are going to be better for it. Every one of these has to be a learning experience.”

After relying on an older core to reach the World Cup semi-finals last year, Borthwick says 2024 has been the “second phase” of his tenure as he goes about building a new team.

“So far in these eight Tests [in 2024] we have had eight new caps,” he explained.

There is youth all across the backline. Immanuel Feyi-Waboso is 21. Fin Smith 22. Ollie Sleightholme, 24, made his debut in New Zealand.

Up front, 22-year-old Fin Baxter has come through. Chandler Cunningham-South at 21 and George Martin, only just 23, have continued to emerge. Experience, though, wins tight Test matches. And while Borthwick and his coaches can’t buy experience, they aim to accelerate the players’ learning.

“The England pack has changed from what was traditionally a very big powerful pack to more of a younger, dynamic pack,” Borthwick explained.

“You can see that younger pack developing. I need to coach them as fast as I can.”

‘We have to develop at tight-head’

While depth is building in some areas, other positions still look light with tight-head prop of particular concern. Too much is being asked of 37-year-old Dan Cole, who has now won more caps at prop than any other Englishman.

The scrum creaked in both Tests against the All Blacks.

“I’ll have a conversation with Coley and see what he wants to do,” said Borthwick. “But quite clearly we need to find some more tight-heads. That’s going to be a big development project.

“Will Stuart has done really well in the last couple of Tests. The New Zealand scrum is very good and outside the scrum I thought he did many things very well.

“Part of my next step is to do that kind of planning and decide on the right thing to do. I’m trying to have consistency in selection and build the number of caps, not just individually but together, so we maximise the cohesion.

“That’s clearly with a longer-term goal in mind but we need results now as well. That’s always a challenge the England head coach has. We need results now and we need to be preparing for several years in advance.”

‘World-class Ford to return’

Behind the scrum, England need more back-up to Alex Mitchell at number nine, with neither Harry Randall or Ben Spencer given much game time. Mitchell played the whole 80 minutes in Auckland.

At fly-half Marcus Smith was trusted with running the side throughout the tour, and while he missed some crucial kicks in the first Test against New Zealand, he excelled in Tokyo against Japan and set up three of England’s four tries against the All Blacks.

Namesake Fin came off the bench twice but didn’t have long enough to impose himself.

“I thought Marcus has done some really good things, when you see the ability he has to see space, to create tries, to open up a defence,” Borthwick said.

Meanwhile, the England boss was unequivocal when asked whether 96-cap George Ford still had a role to play after missing the tour through injury. If Ford returns to form and fitness, he could well wear number 10 again in the autumn.

“He is world class and I thought his performance in the Six Nations was exceptional,” Borthwick said.

“The three of them – Fin Smith, George Ford and Marcus – it puts us in a pretty enviable position.”

‘We have fight and spirit’

England’s players will now get a minimum five-week break before returning to their clubs. The new Professional Game Partnership between clubs and the Rugby Football Union has been agreed, which will give Borthwick slightly more control over a core group of 20 or so players.

Their next assignment in a white jersey will be at Twickenham in November with – fittingly – the All Blacks first up.

“We owe them one,” said George.

“To get the results we need to be tactically smart and we’ve got to be really well organised,” continued Borthwick.

“But fundamentally, there’s got to be something that sits underneath all that and that is the fight and spirit that we have within the team.

“What you see in this England team now is fight and spirit, and we need to make sure that gives us a good foundation for everything we do going forward.”

Reports /Trainviral/

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Rugby

Ben Earl delivered on pre-match pledge

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Ben Earl played a pivotal role in England’s thrilling Twickenham win over Ireland in the Six Nations to deliver on his pre-match prediction.

The number eight scored England’s third try in an all-action display after telling head coach Steve Borthwick how his 29th cap would unfold.

“I sat with Ben on Saturday morning,” said head coach Borthwick. “He talked and showed me what he wanted to do against Ireland.

“He did exactly what he said to me.”

The Saracens back row was tireless with ball in hand and earned his second man-of-the-match award of the championship after winning the same accolade for his performance in last month’s win over Wales.

His impressive development in the role as England’s first choice number eight follows an excellent World Cup campaign and Borthwick says the 26-year-old is “delivering” on his targets.

“It is phenomenal, the thought process he is going through and how ambitious he is as a player to get better,” Borthwick said.

“Ben played his first 15 games off the bench. Even in last year’s Six Nations he played a run of games and then he was out.

“I think he feels backed. I get the impression he feels he is growing as a player and he wants to keep getting better.”

‘Everybody involved with England is under incredible scrutiny’

England’s surprise 23-22 win over defending champions Ireland in the penultimate round has revived faint title ambitions heading into their meeting with France on Saturday.

Ireland remain in pole position to defend their title when they host Scotland, but England’s attacking intent at Twickenham, outscoring their visitors 3-2 on tries, was a huge improvement on their capitulation at Murrayfield.

“Post the Scotland game, there was evidence that the weight of the shirt was on the players,” Borthwick added.

“I believe we need to create a supportive environment. Everybody involved with English rugby is under incredible scrutiny. That’s just the way it is.

“There’s incredible expectation and I’d rather be involved in a team where there is expectation upon it than not.

“But with that I want to make sure that young players are coming into a supportive environment. I want to see their point of difference on the grass.

“Mistakes are going to happen and we are understanding of that, but we don’t want to repeat mistakes. We have got to learn fast.

“The team went through a difficult experience at Murrayfield, reviewed it properly and then addressed it on the training field.

“The players weren’t perfect against Ireland, they made mistakes, but at Murrayfield I thought we made a mistake and then went into ourselves, played a little bit small.

“Against Ireland they made errors and got into the next battle. If there is anything I can encourage the players to do, it is go into the next battle.”

— Reports /TrainViral

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Rugby

Marshall Sykes recalled to Scotland squad

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Edinburgh lock Marshall Sykes has been recalled by Scotland for the first time in two years as the squad prepares for Saturday’s Six Nations game in Italy.

Gregor Townsend has called up 24-year-old Sykes for the first time since the 2022 Six Nations in place of Scarlets second row Alex Craig.

Oyonnax’s Rory Sutherland and Javan Sebastian of Edinburgh are recalled as Edinburgh prop WP Nel, 37, drops out.

Glasgow Warriors scrum-half Jamie Dobie is also called back in to the squad.

Veteran forward Nel, who played for Edinburgh against Ospreys on Friday, has not featured in this season’s championship and Scotland are threadbare in the prop department.

Sebastian has been in and out of the squad as he searches for full fitness while Sutherland – a British and Irish Lion in 2021 – was a surprise absentee from the initial squad.

He admitted his disappointment at missing out on the initial pool to Le French Rugby Podcast but is now recalled despite rarely featuring for the French Top 14 side since the World Cup.

Scotland are already without locks Richie and Jonny Gray as well as Cameron Henderson.

Glasgow Warriors centre Sione Tuipulotu has been ruled out of Saturday’s game in Italy because of the injury he picked up in the Calcutta Cup win over England that is expected to rule him out for at least eight weeks.

Darcy Graham is also ruled out and will play no part in the championship for the second year in succession.

Dobie has already trained with the squad in the opening rounds and joins Ben White, Ali Price and George Horne as the scrum-halves in the squad.

Six Nations 2024: BBC rugby team play The Traitors

— Reports /TrainViral

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